Browse popular categories
Most recently posted
By Danika Herrick on March 8, 2024
By Courtney Napier on February 12, 2024
By Arlette Hawkins on January 12, 2024
with Jewel Marlowe of Jeweled Interiors
What’s more fun than buying new furniture? Making over old furniture! This post will show you how to give that bench in your garage or that new-to-you thrift store bargain an updated look with just a few tools and some basic reupholstery skills. Keep reading to learn how interior designer and Spoonflower Ambassador Jewel Marlowe reupholstered a drop-seat chair with Spoonflower’s Performance Velvet. Have a different piece of furniture in mind for your makeover? No problem! The tips below will help you with any reupholstery project.
Jewel: I fell in love with peacoquettedesigns’ Papillo ~ Trianon Cream ~ Large print and was excited to try it out on Spoonflower’s Performance Velvet for my chair project. It was also easy to work with while reupholstering. It comes in a 54″ (137 cm) width, has a little stretch and a very soft hand.
DIY reupholstery is not only fun, but it can be empowering. Because once you’re armed with a few basic upholstery skills, the next time you see an old chair that needs a little love, you’ll be able to give it a second chance at life more quickly and at a much cheaper price than you might think! Plus, the ability to customize furniture leads to creating unique and gorgeous rooms.
One of the easiest reupholstery projects out there is a drop-seat chair, which usually involves a removable seat on a dining room chair. The beauty of a drop-seat chair’s construction is that all of the stapling you’ll have to do is hidden underneath or behind the frame.
This particular project involved removing three pieces of upholstery, lining up the fabric on each piece, then stapling underneath one piece and behind the other two pieces. So while this looks more complicated, it’s the same basic principle as reupholstering a drop-seat chair that only needs stapling underneath the frame.
My chair required two yards of fabric. I was able to determine that amount by measuring around the widest part of each piece of my chair from front to back and side to side.
I kept in mind that I would need a little extra fabric for stapling and compared those numbers to the width of the fabric I would be using. The larger the chair, the more fabric needed, especially if upholstering more than one.
Notes on tools:
Skill Level:
Beginner
The very best advice I can give you during the “tear down” phase is to take pictures as you start to take apart any reupholstery project. In the end, you will reupholster the new fabric in the exact opposite order that you took it apart. I’ve had many times, especially while doing more complicated projects, where I was certain I would intuitively remember the order in which I was supposed to put the fabric back on. Unfortunately, I was sometimes wrong.
Luckily, for a drop-seat chair, the order in which it’s disassembled is often quite simple. On this mid-century modern office chair, the only tricky part was remembering which direction the legs went back onto the frame.
I used a socket wrench to undo the screws on the underside. Then I used a screwdriver to work up under the rubber banding. Under this banding were hidden screws that needed to be removed. Once unscrewed, the plastic backing came right off of the front upholstery piece.
In this situation, I wanted to keep it nice and simple and did not remove the old fabric. Technically, however, a professional upholsterer would remove all old fabric, and often replace the old foam and batting involved in a chair project.
Removing the old fabric is especially important if your drop seat fits inside the frame of an old wooden chair. Extra bulky fabric puts pressure on the joints of the chair and can eventually make it wobbly and unstable.
Pro tip: Take note of how the corners of your chair pieces have been stapled to the underside of the chair. This will come in handy later!
Once you have dissected the chair, it is time to plan the layout of the fabric. Think about the pattern printed on the fabric. Unless you are going for an asymmetrical look, find a center section of your fabric that will make your upholstery job look symmetrical. That center section of the fabric is what you’ll want to line up with the center of the chair piece you’re upholstering.
Once you are extremely confident that you have a plan for where each piece needs to be cut from, you can either use your old fabric as a pattern or drape the new fabric over the upholstery piece. Next, straighten out the fabric, then cut. However, as they say, measure twice and cut once!
Now time for the fun part!
First, line up the center of the fabric to the center of the chair piece you’re reupholstering. Holding the fabric in place where you want it to be, turn everything upside down (or flip it over, depending on the type of piece you’re working with) so you can staple the fabric securely to the back side.
Next, staple one to two staples in the center of each side of the fabric on the back side. Refer to the diagram below for where to staple when.
As you’re stapling, make sure to pull the fabric nice and snug, and to use your hand to smooth out any extra slack. With each staple, be sure to double check that your fabric is still centered, both front to back and side to side. Once you have a couple of staples anchoring all four sides of your fabric, it’s time to slowly start working towards the corners.
Pro tip: A common beginner’s mistake is to sink staples down one side of the piece, but this results in off-centered fabric! Instead, it’s better to sink a couple of staples on each side, check for centering, pull gently (but firmly) and then move to the other side. Keep this rotation process until you get to the corners.
In order to get your fabric stapled evenly, follow this diagram in numerical order.
There are several ways to staple down a corner, so refer back to your original images to see how the chair was originally upholstered. Need some extra help? This post goes over some examples of a few types of corners and tricky areas.
Once you are done stapling your pieces of fabric to the chair, trim off any excess fabric.
Once you’re finished reupholstering one part of the chair, it’s on to the next part! Repeat steps 3-6 with the other parts of your chair.
Now it’s time to put everything back together! As you do so, don’t forget to reference the photos you took earlier of how your chair should look when it’s reassembled.
Congrats! Your project complete is now complete! Pat yourself on the back and take a seat.
2 comments
11 comments
Jewel Marlowe from Jeweled Interiors is an interior designer, blogger and Instagrammer with an affinity for color, pattern and unexpected designs. Her unique looks have been featured in HGTV Magazine, Washington Post, Origin Magazine and many online publications. She accredits her eclectic and gathered taste to her many moves and travels as a military spouse. Jewel now lives in Northern Virginia with her husband and their four children who she has ALMOST convinced that constant home construction and updates are a very normal part of life as they makeover their home for her blog.
More About Jewel Marlowe
This was so helpful, I just started an upholstery business in Aus at https://sewcovered.com.au/
Thanks so much
Cool idea! And you can choose any fabric you like to create a happy workplace … Wow! Why on Earth haven’t I thought about upholstering my old chair before?)) After reading this infographic (https://custom-writing.org/blog/organize-your-study-space?highlight=study%20space) I started making my workplace better to improve motivation a little bit but the only thing that is still driving me crazy is a chair. I can’t find a chair that is both beautiful (suiting the room style) and comfortable. You helped me come up with an awesome solution.
Glad you were able to find a great solution, Lesley!
Best,
Betsy
Spoonflower
Aloha Jewel… and our favorite Latin lurker, et al. (wink)
What a grand idea…!
Now, IF I could only figure out how to disassemble my favorite computer/sewing chair, AND convince myself I could reassemble it… LOL
* * *
Superb concept… thank you very much for sharing your insight with we’uns… and us’uns… from the Ole North State… (grin)
* * *
“Born on Valley Isle,
Home now, North Carolina;
Aloha y’all…”
* * *
Until that time. . .
Inspired me to work on my two sewing room chairs.
That’s great Holly! Thanks for sharing and best of luck with your projects.
-Amy
Spoonflower
I love finding the right thing in a resale store but sometimes it is the defect that has lowered the price that has me buying it. This time it was the solid dark puce seat cover. Spoon flower provided the love. Because I didnt want the pattern matchy-matchy but did want the colors to be the same, so I inverted the direction of the fabric but used the same end of a fat quarter